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Both lawsuits accusing Tarrant County of racial gerrymandering have been dropped or dismissed

A photo of a meeting room full of people, facing ahead and listening to a speaker. Maps of Tarrant County in various shades of green line the left wall, with a person standing in between them, arms crossed.
Miranda Suarez
/
四虎影院
Audience members listen during a public hearing about redistricting Tarrant County's commissioners court map at the county subcourthouse in Arlington on Saturday, May 17, 2025.

Both lawsuits accusing Tarrant County of racial gerrymandering are now over.

A group of Tarrant County residents who sued over the new commissioners court precinct map withdrew their lawsuit Monday without a clear explanation.

A second lawsuit, brought by local branches of the League of Women Voters and the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), had been listed as pending as of Monday, but updated filings show it was dismissed Nov. 28.

Republican County Judge Tim O鈥橦are, who led the redistricting effort, announced the second case鈥檚 dismissal in a Facebook post.

鈥淲e followed the law. And Tarrant County will be the better for it,鈥 he said.

Earlier this year, the Republican majority on the Tarrant County Commissioners Court voted to redraw the court's precincts, giving themselves an extra right-leaning seat. Critics accused them of doing that by packing Black and Hispanic voters into a single precinct, diluting their voting power.

The ruling left Alberto Govea, president of Fort Worth鈥檚 LULAC Council 4568, wondering if he can get justice in Tarrant County, he said in a statement.

鈥淭his illegal redistricting scheme is an attack on our communities' ability to vote for representatives that know and understand our needs,鈥 Govea said. 鈥淭his decision must be challenged both in the courts and streets. This is not party politics. This denies people their right to equal representation.鈥

In the League of Women Voters and LULAC case, the county contended the court had no jurisdiction in the case, and that redistricting had partisan motives, not racial ones.

鈥淎s such, the diminished ability to elect a Democrat is not an injury,鈥 county attorneys wrote in a September filing.

Judge Megan Fahey agreed with the county and dismissed the case.

Attorneys with the Texas Civil Rights Project represented the local League of Women Voters and LULAC branches in the lawsuit. The county misread the law, TCRP said in a press release.

鈥淓ven as Defendant County Judge O鈥橦are and the Commissioners Court try to avoid accountability for their undemocratic and discriminatory map, we will never stop working to amplify the voices of Tarrant County residents and communities of color,鈥 TCRP attorney Nina Oishi said.

The dismissal could be appealed, Republican Commissioner Matt Krause, who is also an attorney, wrote in a Facebook post Tuesday.

鈥淓ven if it is appealed, I would expect the ruling to be upheld,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淎nother very positive development and another blow to those who gaslighted hundreds throughout the redistricting process."

Three out of the five commissioners court members face an election next year: Republicans O鈥橦are and Manny Ramirez, and Democrat Alisa Simmons.

All three have said they plan to run. The new map made Simmons鈥 Precinct 2 more conservative, threatening her chances for reelection. Retiring Republican State Rep. Tony Tinderholt plans to challenge for the seat.

Simmons' longtime deputy, Gabe Rivas, as a Democrat.

Got a tip? Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org.

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Miranda Suarez is 四虎影院鈥檚 Tarrant County accountability reporter. Before coming to North Texas, she was the Lee Ester News Fellow at Wisconsin Public Radio, where she covered statewide news from the capital city of Madison. Miranda is originally from Massachusetts and started her public radio career at WBUR in Boston.